Other sequences that do not yet meet barcode criteria may also be available.

CTTTATCTAGTATTTGGTGCCTGGGCCGGAATAGTAGGAACTGCATTA---AGCCTGCTAATTCGAGCAGAATTAAGCCAGCCAGGCTCACTCCTTGGAGAC---GACCAAATTTATAATGTAATTGTTACCGCACATGCCTTTGTAATAATTTTCTTTATAGTCATACCAATTATAATTGGAGGCTTTGGAAACTGACTCATTCCACTAATG---CTCGGAGCTCCTGACATGGCCTTTCCACGAATAAACAACATAAGCTTTTGACTACTACCCCCCTCATTTCTTCTTCTCTTAGCCTCCTCAGGAGTTGAAGCAGGAGCAGGAACAGGATGAACTGTTTATCCGCCCTTAGCTGGTAATCTAGCACACGCTGGCCCCTCCGTAGATTTA---ACCATTTTCTCCCTTCACTTGGCCGGTATCTCCTCAATTCTCGGAGCAATCAATTTTATTACCACAATTATTAATATAAAACCCCCAGCCATTTCCTTATATCAAGTACCTTTATTTGTATGGGCACTTCTAATTACCGCCGTGCTTCTTTTATTATCCCTCCCAGTTCTTGCTGCC---GGCATTACCATACTTTTGACTGAC-- end --

Wikipedia

Green terror

The green terror or gold saum (Andinoacara rivulatus, syn.Aequidens rivulatus) is a colorful freshwaterfish in the cichlidfamily.[1] The fish originates from the Pacific side of South America in the coastal waters from the Tumbes River in Peru to the Esmeraldas River in Ecuador. Males and females may reach lengths of 30 cm (12 in). Females are sexually mature at around 12 cm (4.7 in).

As the name implies, late juvenile-phase and adult-phase specimens can be very aggressive. This is not guaranteed, however, and peaceful individuals can be observed. Juveniles of A. rivulatus are often sold in aquarium stores. This species is not to be confused with the blue acara, Andinoacara pulcher, which is similar in appearance; the blue acara is not as aggressive and does not grow as large as the gold saum.[citation needed]

A. rivulatus is a popular fish in the aquarium trade and is noted for its hardiness, as well as its aesthetic appeal. These characteristics make it ideal for beginning aquarists or for enthusiasts who prefer to avoid managing the strict water parameters required for other fish species. They are ambitious eaters, and do well on a variety of foods including cichlid pellets, flakes, bloodworms, and shrimp. [2]

A. rivulatus may grow up to 30 cm (12 in) in length; however, 6– to 8-in lengths are more typical. Factors influencing maximum size attainment can be size of the aqaurium relative to population density or the size of the tank relative to the maximum size potential of the fish, water condition and availability of food.

A. rivulatus can be successfully bred around 8 cm (3.1 in). Reproduction can be incited by isolating a breeding pair (each from distinct lineages), raising the water temperature to around 80°F, and providing a flat, textured surface (such as a flat rock or pottery fragment) on which the female can deposit her eggs. Upon reaching 3–4 inches in length, A. rivulatus may be integrated into aquariums with larger cichlids. A significant size disparity between newly added fish and existing fish can retard optimum growth rates of the still-maturing fish. Larger fish, particularly A. ocellatus (oscar cichlid) may feed so aggressively that smaller fish may be unable to ingest adequate quantities of food.